This is about the recent classification of this question as "off-topic" and putting it on hold.
This is a 2 year old question that has ~2k views, and 25 upvotes. I mention this because I'm taking that as indicative of the fact that at least 25 SO users found it helpful.
I remember when I'd first asked the question, a moderator had instantly put it on hold because of the pseudo-poetry that I'd used in the text. I agree, it's a bit cheeky, but the question is still about a very valid problem. It's only after some context was added did the question live on.
I think the current spurt of the people wanting to close this question are looking at it at too shallow an angle. I, as a programmer, like understanding the details of things, and often understanding the etymology behind things helps a lot in seeing how they fit into the bigger picture. I kept seeing an undocumented function in my stack traces, with no mention of it on the Internet. I came here and asked, and a friendly soul told me that it is the bridge between
CF
andUIKit
. That's a nugget of information that many iOS programmers would appreciate. Now I can reason about the stack trace in a better manner, because I can see how the call traveled across different subsystems.One of the people wanting to close the question cited the help center in a comment. IMO this question is a valid fit for the fourth bullet point - "a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development". I consider a "nagging doubt" to be a "problem".
See, I have no interest in keeping this open, for I got the answer I was looking for. I just think it is valuable information for posterity, and should not be removed because of some arbitrary conformance with guidelines.